iBankCoin
Home / chessNwine (page 1460)

chessNwine

Full-time stock trader. Follow me here and on 12631

Midday Update

Just as I suspected, the rubber band is snapping back in the other direction, as we are up roughly 1.75% across the board today, thus far. Moreover, the S&P is putting in a bullish intraday pattern. I am using the $SPY ETF chart in this post in order to show you the up to the minute volume pattern. As I indicate in the current 30 minute chart below, we are flagging above the 104.30 level (1043 on $SPX), and look to be breaking out now. In the short term, we could easily run up to 108 (or 1080) to fill the gap from last week.

__________

Comments »

CHESS MOVES

______________

Seeing as I am quickly up over 11% on the position (timestamped in The PPT), I sold 1/2 of my $NR long at $7.00. As I have been noting re this stock over the past few days, the daily chart shows price action and a volume pattern that are very bullish. However, I suggested that chasing here is not a good idea, especially in this market environment. I am looking for a a light volume retest of the $6.50 area to load up a full position again.

_______________

TOTAL PORTFOLIO:

EQUITIES: 52%

  • LONG: 52% ($AAP $NR $NTAP $LULU $CRM $THOR $APKT)

CASH: 48%

Comments »

Slip ‘n Slide Summer Tape

_____________

MARKET WRAP UP 07/06/10

The past eighteen hours have featured several reversals, frustrating bulls and bears alike with respect to timing Mr. Market’s short term machinations. It was just late last evening that traders were eyeing a major breakdown, with the futures printing close to 1000 on the S&P 500. However, those futures recovered impressively by the opening bell this morning to catapult us to 1042. At that point, we reversed course and slowly faded those intraday gains, before chopping around to close up 0.54% on the session to 1028 by the time the closing bell rang.

Ironically, all of these herky jerky moves in this slip ‘n slide market can be viewed as cathartic and an overall bullish omen, as the last of the complacent bulls are shaken out. It will be only if we break–and hold– below the July 1st intraday low of 1010 that the hammer will have been negated. Beyond that, the broad indices and sectors remain oversold.

Nonetheless, as the updated and annotated daily chart of the S&P 500 illustrates, the 1040 level acted as resistance today, after being support for several months (see below).

______________

____________

Turning to other sectors, the emerging markets represent perhaps the most notable pocket of strength, as their ETF put in a nice hammer last Thursday, and has seen sound confirmation even since (see below).

_____________

______________

Conversely, one of the recurring arguments advanced by the bears since last week has been the persistent weakness in the transportation stocks. To be sure, they did not print a hammer last Thursday, so much as they did a long legged doji. However, as I note on the daily chart of their ETF below, the trannies are in a tight falling wedge, within the context of a downtrend. This is often considered to be a bullish reversal pattern.

______________

____________

Perhaps the most inconsistent argument that the steadfast bears have been making is that the small caps are the “tell” for this market. Nothing could be further from the truth. The recent weakness in the small caps has caused many bearish traders to argue that the broad market has much further to fall.

However, as you can see from my chart below, the small caps have not been leading us down and, in fact, have been outperforming the broad indices and sectors throughout this whole correction since April. Indeed, the small cap ETF has yet to breach the February lows, whereas we already know the broad indices did so early last week. For the small caps to finally show weakness now would be much more of a lagging, than leading, indicator for the market, in my view.

_____________

____________

My analysis continues to lead to me to believe that this market is headed higher in the coming days and possibly weeks. I do not challenge the overarching downtrend since April. In fact, I foresaw it. However, I see technicals and sentiment lining up in favor of a short term bounce.

Individually, my top holding and best idea is still $NR. If you agree with my bullish analysis of this issue, chasing it here is still not correct. However, you will want to keep a close eye on it for a benign pullback, given the strong and consistent buying volume over the past few months (see below).

_____________

____________

Finally, should the market see some sustained buying in the coming days, my top short squeeze idea is to play the homebuilder sector, as I detailed last evening. A stock like $LEN would give you a high beta short squeeze, for a short term trade.

Comments »

Hunkered Down

_______________

Many traders are understandably becoming even more frustrated with this market than they have been over the past few days. A promising rally this morning has been fading all day, and we are back to flat going into the last two hours of trading. For the record, I am still long all of my positions, and I will hold them until my stop losses are breached. I believe the risk/reward profile is still in my favor to the upside, despite what all of the geniuses on the twitter stream would have you believe.

To drive home a point: I have an opinion here. I have placed my bets, and I am willing to accept the risks associated with making such bets.

Perhaps some of you superstars have a 1000% lifetime batting average, and will laugh in my face upon the occurrence of an old fashioned crash (or “panic” as it were, prior to 1929). Such is life.

Now, you can go back to saying “OMG OMG OMG OMG!” every time crude oil ticks down, and the Yen ticks up.

_______________

TOTAL PORTFOLIO:

EQUITIES: 56%

  • LONG: 56% ($AAP $NR $NTAP $LULU $CRM $THOR $APKT)

CASH: 44%

Comments »

Wassup Homies

_________

If you have been a regular reader of mine, then you know by now most assuredly that one concept I often talk about is the idea of a prior resistance level turning into current support, and vice versa. Looking across a variety of time frames to identify these important price zones is crucial to gaining the correct perspective for your shorter term directional bets.

The weekly chart of the homebuilders is a pretty good example of a certain price area that has acted as both important resistance and support at various times over the past few years. On the $XHB, the $14 zone provided very strong support, as the buyers aggressively stepped in during the summer of 2008 selloff. After that, the buyers tried to defend the $14 level in the October 2008 crash, only to see it give way in the post-election day swoon. For the next several quarters, $14 was a brick wall of resistance, where bulls scurried away and bears came growling back in to short the homies into the mud.

It was only in the late summer of 2009 that $14 was finally recaptured again by the bulls. For the next several quarters, the homies based out just above the big 1-4, before (briefly) breaking out this past spring. Ever since late April, however, the bears have been back in the driver’s seat, and we now find ourselves at $14, yet again.

Now, even if you are longer term bearish on the homebuilders and housing in general, I believe it would be incorrect to not cover any short positions right here, right now. The probability of a bounce from this key level is very high, and I would suspect the savvier bears who shorted the homies in late April are taking some near term profits here.

Price has memory, and the $14 level is sure to be a tough battleground, yet again, with some of the late to the party bears on the cusp of being trapped. This is a heavily shorted sector, and some of the short squeezes here will be violent. If the broad market can follow through from last week’s hammers…buckle up.

______________

__________

(WARNING–Rated R)

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hvNi0VZwc8 450 300]

Comments »

Rhyming or Repeating

“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.” -Mark Twain

_______________

I think it is safe to say that the Nasdaq Composite was the main driver of speculation, as far as the broad indices were concerned, during the bubble that popped in 2000. Similarly, the Dow Jones Industrial Average saw a comparable run up during the “Roaring Twenties,” leading up to the Crash of 1929 and subsequent Great Depression.

Below, you will find the present day quarterly chart of the Nasdaq, as well as a quarterly chart of the Dow Jones leading up to, during, and after the Great Depression. I believe that the two charts are similar enough to warrant using the elder one as evidence of possible scenarios going forward.

According to the old Dow chart, the most likely scenario for the next few quarters for us now is an overall slow, albeit choppy, move sideways to down. You can draw your own conclusions, but I do believe the fundamental and technical backdrops are similar enough to make this exercise a constructive one.

______________

_____________

Comments »